A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 2021 q DOW 34,269.16 -473.66 BRIEFING U.S. job openings at record high U.S. job openings surged in March to a re- cord high, underscoring the rapid increase in labor demand as vaccinations accelerate and states re- open their economies. The number of avail- able positions increased to 8.12 million during the month, the highest since 2000, from an upwardly revised 7.53 million in February, the Labor De- partment’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Sur- vey, showed Tuesday. The number of va- cancies exceeded hires by more than 2 million, the largest gap on record and evidence of current hiring challenges. Many employers say they are unable to fill positions be- cause of ongoing fears of catching the coronavirus, child care responsibilities and generous unemploy- ment benefits. The increase in open- ings was fairly broad, in- cluding more available positions in accommo- dation and food services, manufacturing and con- struction. 1 million sign up for ‘Obamacare’ President Joe Biden said Tuesday 1 million Americans had signed up for health insurance un- der “Obamacare” during a special enrollment period for those needing cover- age during the coronavi- rus pandemic. Biden reopened the HealthCare.gov insurance markets in February for a special six-month sign-up opportunity that will go through Aug. 15. His coronavirus relief pack- age also boosted tax- payer subsidies . However, the 1 million figure announced Tues- day by the White House also includes people who would have otherwise qualified for a sign-up op- portunity, even without Biden’s special enrollment period. A life change such as losing workplace cover- age or getting married is considered a “qualifying life event.” Last year about 390,000 people signed up because of life changes from Feb. 15-April 30, the government said, and in 2019 it was over 260,000. The number of unin- sured Americans has risen because of job losses due to the pandemic . Hemp group’s suit against DEA tossed A federal district judge in Washington, D.C., has dismissed the hemp in- dustry’s lawsuit alleging DEA restrictions overstep the agency’s authority. The Hemp Industries Association filed a com- plaint last year saying the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s rules would “effectively destroy the burgeoning hemp industry” by criminalizing crop extracts that exceed 0.3% THC, the psychoac- tive compound in mar- ijuana. The hemp industry argues this threatens ev- ery stage of production because hemp’s extracts temporarily become more concentrated in THC during processing. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled the case should be heard in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, not in his U.S. District Court. The Hemp Industries Association has filed a parallel legal action in the federal appeals court . — Bulletin wire reports q bendbulletin.com/business q NASDAQ 13,389.43 -12.43 S&P 500 4,152.10 -36.33 p 30-YR T-BOND 2.35% +.03 p CRUDE OIL $65.28 +.36 q GOLD $1,835.90 -1.60 p SILVER $27.66 +.18 p EURO $1.2152 +.0007 BEND Single-family home prices climbing again BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin The median price of a single-family home in Bend jumped $61,000 in April compared to the month before, accord- ing to a monthly data report. The Beacon Report showed that the median price of a single-family home in April was $651,000, nearly $200,000 higher than the price was in April 2020. The median price is the midpoint value of all transactions in a month, which was heavily influenced by a growing number of sales in the million-dol- lar-plus range, according to the Beacon Appraisal Group LLC report for Cen- tral Oregon. Home sales of a $1 million or more accounted for 17% of all sales in April in Bend, compared to 7% of the sales during the same time the year before. The volume of high-end home sales is a milestone for Bend, said Donnie Mon- tagner, owner of the Beacon Appraisal Group of Redmond. Real estate prices in Central Oregon have been on the rise for the better part of a year, driven in part by out-of-town- ers wanting to live in more rural areas. Borrower-friendly interest rates also have ignited home sales nationwide giv- ing more buying power to buyers be- cause their money goes further. The growth in home values is hap- pening across the country, despite the instability caused by the pandemic. In Redmond, the single-family home median price stayed steady at $413,000, but inventory levels remain low, accord- ing to the report. In April 2020, the me- dian sales price shot up to $358,000 in Redmond. The April sales data for Sunriver put the median sales price for a single-fam- ily home at $906,000, according to the report. Homes in Sunriver were on the market for an average of five days. Prices in Sunriver have been on the upswing since the third quarter of 2016 when the median sales price was $385,000, according to the report. Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com Extension of grace period for past-due rent goes to Gov. Brown BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau Astronaut Alan Shepard sits in his capsule aboard a Mercu- ry-Redstone rocket at Cape Ca- naveral, Florida, on May 5, 1961. Freedom 7 was the first American manned suborbital space flight, making Shepard the first Amer- ican in space. Later that day, Shepard was retrieved by a U.S. Marine helicopter after splash- down in the Atlantic Ocean at the end of his suborbital flight. Photos: AP file (above), NASA (right) TOURISM’S FINAL FRONTIER 60 years after the first American went to space, adventurers are lining up BY MARCIA DUNN • AP Aerospace Writer C APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Sixty years after Alan Shepard became the Matt Hartman/AP file first American in space, everyday people are on the verge of following in his cosmic footsteps. Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin used this month’s anniversary to kick off an auction for a seat on the company’s first crew spaceflight — a short Shepard-like hop launched by a rocket named New Shepard. The Texas liftoff is targeted for July 20, the date of the Apollo 11 moon landing. Virgin Galactic’s VSS Unity departs Mojave Air & Space Port in California in February 2020. Virgin Galactic’s spaceship, tucked under the wing of its spe- cial carrier aircraft, was on a long-awaited ferry flight to its new home in New Mexico, where it would un- dergo ret- rofitting for The sky-high price each traveler will pay commercial on a 1½-week SpaceX trip next year. operations Virgin Galactic has charged about carrying $250,000 in the past, though that’s tourists on expected to go up, and Blue Origin hops into won’t publicize ticket prices. space. $55 MILLION See Space / A12 AAA expects huge Memorial Day travel spike Associated Press U.S. highways will be far busier over Memorial Day weekend than last year, but traffic still won’t reach pre-pan- demic levels, according to a forecast by the AAA auto club. AAA officials say travel will rise because more Americans have been vaccinated against COVID-19 — about one-third of U.S. adults — and consumer confidence is growing. 60% Expected increase compared with Memorial Day weekend 2020, numbering more than 37 million people on U.S. highways The auto club and insur- ance company said Tuesday it expects more than 37 mil- lion people to travel at least 50 miles from home during the holiday weekend, up 60% from last year, which was the lowest since AAA began keep- ing records in 2000. If the AAA forecast is right, it would still be 6 million people, or 13%, fewer than left home over Memorial Day 2019. AAA said 34 million Amer- icans plan driving trips be- tween May 27 and May 31, a 52% increase over last year, and nearly 2.5 million will take plane trips, nearly six times more than the same pe- riod in 2020. A small number will take buses or trains. So far in May, nearly 1.5 mil- lion people per day have gone through U.S. airport check- points, according to the Trans- portation Security Adminis- tration. AAA said its air-travel forecast seems low because it counts each traveler once, while TSA counts somebody twice if they take a round-trip flight. Gov. Kate Brown’s signature awaits a bill that gives tenants more time to pay past-due rent stemming from the corona- virus pandemic and protects their future ability to rent. The Oregon House sent Sen- ate Bill 282 to the governor on a 39-17 vote on Tuesday. Rep. Julie Fahey, a Democrat from Eugene and chairwoman of the House Committee on Housing, said the bill banks on millions coming in state and federal aid to tenants and landlords. “It is a reasonable compro- mise bill that sets the stage for a more equitable recovery,” said Fahey, the bill’s floor manager and chief sponsor in the House. “By passing this bill, we can en- sure that Oregon tenants and landlords can get the full benefit of rental assistance coming to our state and help prevent the fallout from the pandemic fol- lowing the most vulnerable Or- egonians for years to come.” A Dec. 21 special session of the Legislature extended the evictions moratorium from Dec. 30 to June 30, and also set aside a total of $200 million for assis- tance — $150 million for land- lords and $50 million for ten- ants. The Oregon Department of Housing and Community Services reported to the House committee on May 4 that $40 million was paid from the land- lord compensation fund in the first round in March. See Rent / A12 Grass seed dealer settles for $300K in labeling case BY GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press SALEM — A Willamette Valley grass seed dealer ac- cused of mislabeling more than 8 million pounds of seed has reached a settlement with state agriculture officials. Dynamic Seed Source LLC and owner Trevor Abbott have agreed to pay $300,000 in fines to the Oregon Department of Agriculture as part of the deal. The company will also have its wholesale seed dealer’s license suspended for one year, effec- tive June 30. The Agriculture Department initially alleged Dynamic Seed Source and Abbott in 2019 had mislabeled 124 seed lots as Kentucky 31, or K-31, a pop- ular variety of tall fescue used for livestock forage, manicured lawns, erosion control and turf. See Seed / A12